Jason Garrett said Cowboys QB Dak Prescott handled everything well as a rookie

Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said QB Dak Prescott handled everything well as rookie last year and needs to continue to work and go about things as he has. He said Prescott has great poise, composure and confidence. (video by Clarence Hill Jr.)

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Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said QB Dak Prescott handled everything well as rookie last year and needs to continue to work and go about things as he has. He said Prescott has great poise, composure and confidence. (video by Clarence Hill Jr.)

Mansfield’s Jerod Evans hopes to become next Dak Prescott

Jerod Evans watched as Dak Prescott surprised everyone, including the Cowboys, last season. Prescott proved that it doesn’t matter when a player is drafted.

Despite being a fourth-round choice, Prescott arguably had the best rookie season by a quarterback in NFL history.

“To come in in the fourth round, Dak has blown it up,” Evans said. “I keep hearing the comparisons. It’s an honor to get compared to someone who’s doing so great in the league, especially as a rookie, but he didn’t start [low-round picks making good]. It was definitely started way before him.”

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Evans projects as a fifth- or sixth-round choice after quarterbacking Virginia Tech for one season. CBS draft analyst Dane Brugler ranks Evans as the eighth-best player at his position.

“He would have benefited from returning for his senior season,” Brugler said. “But Evans is the type of competitor comfortable betting on himself. He checks boxes for his size [6-foot-3, 232 pounds], athleticism and arm strength, but the mental conversion from what he was asked to do in college to what is expected of quarterbacks in the NFL is a considerable leap. Although he might be able to mask his inconsistent footwork and mechanics as a pro, his erratic accuracy and decision-making are the two main reasons he won’t see the field early in his career.

“Overall, Evans is wired right for the NFL game and he has an intriguing ceiling once coached up. But it will require a patient coaching staff. A possible down-the-line starter who might not give the job back once he gets on the field.”

Evans has taken a winding road from Mansfield to the NFL. He spent two seasons at Trinity Valley Community College after leaving the Air Force Academy. Evans then became Justin Fuentes’ first commit to the Hokies after Fuentes left Memphis.

Evans won the starting job, and, in 2016, only Deshaun Watson and Lamar Jackson had better seasons in the ACC. Evans completed 63.5 percent of his passes for 3,546 yards with 29 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

Now, it’s on to the NFL.

“I feel like I can step into any system and produce,” Evans said. “If you look at my journey, I’ve been to the Air Force Academy, to Trinity Valley where it’s a spread offense, and I went to Virginia Tech. My high school was an I-formation. So I think I can play in any system.”

Overview

It is an average year for the position. Four quarterbacks could go in the first round, but it is lacking a clear blue-chip, can’t-miss prospect. A few starters should come out of this group, but it lacks depth.

Cowboys’ needs

The Cowboys drafted Dak Prescott in the fourth round of the 2016 draft. All he did was produce the best rookie season in NFL history. He won offensive rookie of the year over teammate Ezekiel Elliott by going 13-3 with a 67.8 completion percentage, 3,667 yards, 23 touchdowns, only four interceptions and a passer rating of 104.9. Tony Romo, who missed the first nine games with a compression fracture in his back, will not return as Prescott’s backup. Kellen Moore, who missed the 2016 season after breaking his right leg during training camp, re-signed. The 27-year-old veteran is a favorite of offensive coordinator Scott Linehan. The Cowboys will draft a quarterback in the middle rounds to groom behind Prescott and Moore.